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Telecommunications
Glossary
Terms
appear in Alphabetical Order
- Abbreviated Dialing
- A feature that permits the calling party
to dial the destination telephone number in fewer than normal digits.
Abbreviated Dialing numbers must be set up in advance of their use.
Speed Dialing is a typical example of Abbreviated Dialing.
Account Codes
- Also known as Project Codes or Bill-Back
Codes. Account Codes are additional digits dialed by the calling party
that provide information about the call. Typically used by hourly professionals
(accountants, lawyers, etc.) to track and bill clients, projects, etc.
- Agent
- A person or organization that acts on
behalf of another. In the telecommunications industry, Agents typically
are independent individuals or companies that market the services of
a carrier as if they were employees of that carrier.
Aggregator
- An independent entity that brings several
subscribers together to form a group that can obtain long-distance service
at a reduced rate. Subscribers are billed by the original IXC. The aggregator
only provides the initial set-up of the plan. He usually provides no
service after that. Different than a reseller.
- Alternate Access
- A form of local access where the provider
is not the LEC, but is authorized or permitted to provide such service.
- Alternate Access Carriers
- Local exchange carriers in direct competition
with the RBOCs. Normally found only in the larger metropolitan areas.
Examples are Teleport and Metropolitan Fiber Systems.
- Alternative Operator Services
- Operator services provided by a company
other than a LECRBOC or AT&T that is authorized to provide such
service.
- ANI - See Automatic Number
Identification.
-
- Answer Supervision
- The off-hook indication sent back to the
originating end when the called station answers.
ARI
- Automatic Room Identification (Hotel/Motel
room number)
Automatic Number Identification
- Originating Number
(1) The number associated with the telephone station(s) from which switched
calls are originated
(or terminated).
(2) A software feature associated with Feature Group D (and optional
on Feature Group B) circuits. ANI provides the originating local telephone
number of the calling party. This information is transmitted as part
of the digit stream in the signalling protocol, and included in the
Call Detail Record for billing purposes.
(3) ANI may also be used to refer to any phone number.
Baby Bells - See RBOC Backbone
-
- Ballot
- A release form that authorizes a customer's
long-distance phone service to be switched to (another) long-distance
carrier, or reseller. Also know as a Letter Of Agency or LOA.
BAN - Billing Account Number
- Used by telephone companies to designate
a billing account, i.e., a customer or customer location that receives
a bill. A customer may have any number of BANs.
Banded Rates
- Tariffed rates which may be changed by
the carrier within a specified range. Frequently, state commissions
require notice to the commission prior to each change. Banded rates
are being used less frequently today.
Bell Customer Code
- A three-digit numeric code, appended to
the end of the Main Billing Telephone Number, that is used by Local
Exchange Carriers to provide unique identification of customers.
Bell Operating Company - BOC
- The local (or regional) telephone company
that owns and operates lines to customer locations and Class 5 Central
Office Switches. BOCs have connections to other COs, Tandem (Class 4
Toll) offices and may connect directly to IECs like WorldCom, AT&T,
MCI, Sprint, etc. BOC may refer to the nineteen Bell Operating Companies
that are owned by the seven RHCs (Regional Holding Companies) (not including
Cincinnati Bell or Southern New England Telephone). The BOC role was
originally defined by the 1982 Modified Final Judgement that specified
the terms of the AT&T Divestiture). For Example, the three BOCs:
Mountain Bell, Northwestern Bell and Pacific Northwest Bell are owned
by the U.S. West RHC. Each BOC may service more than one LATA, but BOCs
are generally constrained from providing long distance service between
LATAs.
Billing Account Number - BAN
- Used by telephone companies to designate
a customer or customer location that will be billed. A single customer
may have multiple billing accounts.
Bill-To-Room
- A billing option associated with Operator
Assisted calls that allows the calling party to bill a call to their
hotel room. With this option, the carrier is required to notify the
hotel, upon completion of the call, of the time and charges.
Block Calls
- Prevent calls from completing to the requested
destination. May be due to network problems (outage, overload, etc.),
or by customer request (e.g. block calls from-or-to certain NPAs, NXXs,
States, LATAs, etc.).
BOC - See Bell Operating Company
-
- Bong
- An interactive signal that prompts the
originating end user to enter additional information. For example: 1010555
Bong (Enter Destination) Bong (Enter Billing information)
BTN - Billing Telephone Number
- The phone number associated, for billing
purposes, with the Working Phone Number.
Bypass
- Access an IEC other than the customer's
Equal Access carrier by dialing 10+CIC Code. (e.g. Bypass to WorldCom
by dialing "1010555"). See Walkthrough, CIC Code
Calling Card
- A telecommunication credit card with an
AuthCode for using a long distance carrier when the customer is away
from their home or office (ANI).
Carrier
- A telecommunications provider which owns
switch equipment.
Carrier Identification Code - CIC
- A three digit number used with Feature
Groups B and D to access a particular IEC's switched services from a
local exchange line. One or more CIC codes are assigned to each carrier.
(i.e. there may be multiple CICs per ACNA). See Bypass
Casual Calling
- Allow any ANI (including undefined ANIs)
to access a given carrier. For example, if the originator is calling
from a non-coin phone, they may dial 1010555+destination number and
have the call routed through WorldCom and billed to the originating
phone number.
Casual Customer
- Any person or organization that dials
any CIC Code. (Not necessary to presubscribe to the carrier.)
Centrex
- A service that is functionally similar
to a customer-premise PBX, but provided by means of equipment located
in a Central Office.
CIC
- See Carrier Identification Code (WorldCom
= "555")
Class of Service - COS
- A special limitation on what numbers can
and cannot be called. International, 809, 809 + Canada, 48 contiguous
states, etc.
COCOT
- Customer Owned Coin Operated Telephone
Coin Phone
- A coin-operated pay phone with restricted
access to some services (e.g. International calling). Coin phones have
subclasses of Public, Semi Public, and Private.
Collect
- A call that is paid for by the receiving/destination
phone number. Requires approval/authorization of the person being called.
Common Carrier
- A carrier that holds itself out as serving
the public (or a segment thereof) indifferently (i.e., without regard
to the identity of the customer and without undue discrimination). Common
carriers may vary rates based on special considerations and may in fact
serve only a small fraction of the general public.
Contract
- A legally-binding agreement between a
vendor and a customer to provide Products, Services or Features in a
specified quantity and quality, for a specified price, during a specified
period of time.
Contract Tariffs
- Services and rates based on contracts
negotiated with individual customers, but theoretically available to
all customers. AT&T has filed several hundred contract tariffs.
CONUS-CONtiguous United States
- The 48 contiguous U.S. states. Used primarily
to designate the operating range or authorization of a satellite or
radio facility.
Country Code
- Two or three digit codes used for International
calls outside of the North American Numbering Plan area codes. Dial:
011 + country code + city code + local phone number) (e.g. "011
+ 91 + 22 + 123- 4567" 91 = India, 22 = Bombay)
Cutover
- The exact date/time that a phone number,
circuit, etc. is scheduled to be (or was) moved from one implementation
(carrier, etc.) to another. (e.g. moving an 800 number from MCI to WorldCom).
Cut-Through Dialing
- "10"+CIC+" #" followed
by an AuthCode for IntraLATA calls.
DA - Directory Assistance
- Phone Number Lookup Service
DAL - Dedicated Access Line
- A non-switched circuit from the customer
to a carrier.
DDD - Direct Distance Dialing
- Any switched telecommunication service
(like 1+, 0++, etc.) that allows a call originator to place long distance
calls directly to telephones outside the local service area without
an operator.
Deactivation
- A request to terminate service (or the
process of terminating service)
Dedicated Line
- A private line leased from a telecommunications
carrier.
Default Carrier
- Your regular Dial-1 carrier. Call 1-700-555-4141
to find your default carrier.
Dial
- To Place A Call On A Switched Network.
The term "dial" is obsolete - based on rotary dial phones
and electromechanical relay switches (which are nearly non-existent
in modern telephone systems.) Touch Tone service recognizes dual tones
that are generated as each telephone key is pressed. Where Touch Tone
service is not available, telephones and switches electronically "pulse"
signals that emulate the older rotary dial telephones. The terms "place"
a call or "originate" a call are more accurate than "dial".
Dial Tone
- Ready To Place/Originate A Call. When
the off hook indication is received at a central office, a dial tone
signal is sent to the originating caller on a switched network to indicate
that the switch is ready to accept a number.
Dialer
- Equipment that pulses out a standard dial
protocol signal.
Digital
- A device or method that uses discrete
variations in voltage, frequency, amplitude, location, etc. to encode,
process, or carry binary (zero or one) signals for sound, video, computer
data or other information. For example, a digital clock displays the
time as discrete numeric values, rather than angular displacement of
analog hands. Digital communications technology generally permits higher
speeds of transmission with a lower error rate than can be achieved
with analog technology. When analog signals are received and amplified
at each repeater station, any noise is also amplified. A digital signal,
however, is detected and regenerated (not amplified). Unlike amplification,
any noise (less than a valid signal) is eliminated by digital regeneration.
Directory Assistance - DA
- An information service whereby operators
assist customers in obtaining the telephone number(s) they wish to call.
Equal Access
- (AT&T Divestiture - 1982 Modified
Final Judgement) The provision of one-plus capability to interLATA competitors
of AT&T. Customers should be able to reach the carrier of their
choice by dialing 1+ the long-distance number. The MFJ and the FCC require
local exchange carriers to provide equal access (most central offices
now have this capability). Equal Access may also refer to a more generic
concept under which the BOCs must provide access services to AT&T's
competitors that are equivalent to those provided to AT&T.
Facilities-Based Carrier - FBC
- A carrier that uses its own facilities
to provide service, in contrast with resellers, that purchase the services
of other carriers and then retail the services to customers. (Most facilities-based
carriers use the services of other carriers to some extent.)
FCC - Federal Communications Commission
- Regulates interstate communications: licenses,
rates, tariffs, standards, limitations, etc. Appointed by U.S. President
.
IC
- Interexchange Carrier - IXC - IEC (IEC
is preferred). A company providing long-distance phone service between
LECs and LATAs.
IEC - Interexchange Carrier
- IC - IXC (IEC is preferred). A company
providing long-distance phone service between LECs and LATAs.
IEC Miles - Interexchange Carrier (Long Distance) Miles
-
- IXC Miles
- On a Price Quote, the coordinates of Location
A and Location B are used to calculate mileage-dependent line charges.
Interexchange
- Communication between two different LATAs.
InterLATA
- Communication between Local Access Transport
Areas. 1982 MFJ requires LECs to use an IEC for InterLATA services.
International
- Between multiple nations.
Interstate
- Between multiple states. Interstate communications
are regulated by the FCC.
IntraLATA
- Communication within a Local Access Transport
Area. 1982 MFJ allows LEC to handle these calls without an IEC.
Intrastate
- Communication within a single state. Intrastate
communications are regulated by each state's PUC.
IXC
- 1) Interexchange Carrier (IEC is preferred).
A company providing long-distance phone service between LECs and LATAs.
2) Interexchange Circuit. A circuit that connects PoPs.
IXC MilesInterexchange Carrier (Long Distance) Miles
- On a Price Quote, the coordinates of Location
A and Location B are used to calculate mileage-dependent line charges.
LATA
- Local Access Transport Areas (200 in the
U.S.). A geographic service area defined in the AT&T Modified Final
Judgement. The RBOCs (baby Bells) and GTE are restricted to operations
within, but not between, LATAs. Long distance service within a LATA
is provided by the LEC. Service between LATAs is provided by an IEC.
LATAs are represented by a 3-character code, and there are 164 of them
across the country.
LEC - See Local Exchange Carrier
-
- LEC BAN - Billing Account Number
- 3-digit number appended to the billing
phone number used as the LEC customer number. Groups all ANIs for a
customer.
LEC Billing
- Arrangement whereby the Local Exchange
Carrier invoices the customer for some or all telecommunications services.
LEC Card
- The billing arrangement which enables
the caller to bill calls to an authorized calling card issued by a local
exchange carrier.
LEC Charges
- Charges that are the responsibility of
the local exchange carrier.
Letter Of Agency - LOA
- A document that authorizes changing the
service provider. (See RespOrg, 800 Portability)
Local Access
- Local Loop. The connection from a subscriber
to the Central Office. The portion of a circuit connecting the LEC's
CO with the customer's premise equipment across the local network.
Local Access Provider
- Any organization that is authorized to
provide local access. (May or may not be the LEC.)
Local Exchange Carrier - LEC
- The local or regional telephone company
that owns and operates lines to customer locations and Class 5 Central
Office Switches. LECs have connections to other COs, Tandem (Class 4
Toll) offices and may connect directly to IECs like WorldCom, AT&T,
MCI, Sprint, etc.
Local Exchange Service
- Local phone calls.
Long Distance Carrier
- A company providing long-distance phone
service between LECs and LATAs.
Message Toll Service - MTS
- Pay-by-the-minute switched long distance
services. Includes conventional long distance and measured WATS.
NPA Area Codes, NXX Exchanges and XXXX Line Numbers
- The process for assigning 10-digit (3+3+4)
North American telephone numbers
NASC - 800 Number Administration and Service Center
- The organization that administers the
SMS/800 system for the reservation, registration and administration
of all North American 800 numbers for all carriers. (See 800 Portability,
RespOrg and SMS/800)
- NPA - Numbering Plan Areas
- North American "Area Codes."
(3 digits: 2-to-9, 0-or-1, 0-to-9. Middle digit to expand soon)
NPA-NXX Routing
- Area Code / Exchange Routing. Route calls
based on the originating ANI NPA-NXX.
- NPA Routing
- Area Code Routing. Route calls based on
the originating ANI NPA (area code.)
NPA Split
- Subdividing an area code, with the creation
of a new area code. This is necessary when the number of telephones
in an area code (NPA) grows to an excessive number.
NUS
- NASC SMS/800 Number Search. SMS application
used to find available 800 numbers and reserve them for up to 60 days.
NXX
- Exchanges (First 3 digits of a 7-digit
phone number). (2-to-9, 0-to-9, 0-to-9) (Digits 4, 5 and 6 in a 10 digit
NANP telephone number - NPA-NXX-XXXX).
OCC - Other Common Carrier
- Not part of the original AT&T system.
Off Hook
- The signal that the telephone receiver
has been lifted (activated). Originating off hook activates a dial tone
on switched networks. Destination off hook completes a call (and activates
minute-by-minute billing for long distance calls).
One Plus - 1+
- Customer ability to access the long distance
service provider of their choice by first dialing 1, then the long distance
number. Equal Access guaranteed by the 1982 AT&T MFJ. 1+ is an outbound
service where the calling station pays the charges.
Operator Service Call - OSC
- A call that is placed through a human
or automated operator (0+).
Operator Service Provider - OSP - OS Provider
- The vendor that supplies operator service.
Outbound
- Outward Sending - Call Originating - Dialing
Out
Payphone
- A public (or private) telephone that accepts
coins or encoded credit cards.
Person-to-Person
- Operator assisted phone call - only billed
if the specified person is available.
PIC - Primary Interexchange Carrier
- The IEC that 1+ calls are routed to. Specified
by ANI.
PIC Charges
- A LEC charge for changing the PIC. Often
paid by the new IEC. If a LEC sends a PIC charge to a customer, the
new IEC will typically credit the customer's account.
PIC Freeze
- A PIC Freeze prevents the long distance
from being switched for the specified ANIs. Useful to prevent slamming,
or the unauthorized switching of long distance services.
PIC Request
- A request record sent to a LEC asking
for an ANI to be activated, deactivated or changed in some way.
PIC Response
- A response record sent by a LEC (corresponding
to a previous PIC Request) with a response code that indicates whether
the request was performed. (Some LECs return non-standard PIC Response
codes.)
PICC
- National Access Fee, LD Line Charge, Presubscribed
Interexchange Carrier Charge, Presubscribed Line Charge, Regulatory
Related Charge, FCC Primary Carrier 1st Line, or Carrier Line Charge
Point Of Presence - POP
- The physical access location interface
between a local exchange carrier and an Interexchange Carrier fiber
network. The point to which the telephone company terminates a subscriber's
circuit for long distance service or leased line communications.
Point-To-Point
- Non-switched, dedicated communication
circuit.
POP - (See Point Of Presence)
-
- POTS - Plain Old Telephone Service
-
- Primary Interexchange Carrier
- The long distance company that is automatically
accessed when a customer dials 1+.
Private Line
- Uses dedicated circuits to connect customer's
equipment at both ends of the line. Does not provide any switching capability
(unless supported by customer premise equipment). Usually includes two
local loops and an IEC circuit.
Provisioning
- The process by which a requested (ordered)
service is designed, implemented and tracked (providing the subcomponent
parts).
PUC - Public Utilities Commission
- The agency regulating intrastate phone
service.
Rate Element
- A recurring fixed charge for IEC or LEC
service at the lowest level. A local loop may have multiple rate elements
associated with it, which make up the fixed portion of the monthly bill.
For example: Local Access, Local Mileage, Entrance facilities, Channel
Termination, Interexchange, etc.
Rates and Tariffs
- Standards published by AT&T, OCCs,LECs,
and IECs that define service availability, cost and provisioning procedures.
RBOC - Regional Bell Operating Company
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- Rebiller - See Reseller
-
- Regional Bell Operating Companies
- RBOC
- One of the seven "Baby Bell"
Companies created by the 1982 Modified Final Judgement that specified
the terms of the AT&T Divestiture. The seven RHCs include: NYNEX,
Bell Atlantic, Bell South, Southwestern Bell, U.S. West, Pacific Telesis,
and Ameritech. "RBOC" is sometimes used informally to refer
to the Regional Holding Companies defined in the 1982 MFJ. (See Bell
Operating Companies - There are 19 BOCs).
Regulators
- FCC, PUC, Federal Courts (e.g. MFJ), etc.
Reseller - Also known as Rebiller
- A long-distance carrier (IEC) that does
not own a network, but leases bulk capacity and resells portions of
it at a higher rate.
Residential Customer
- An individual (non-business) telephone
system subscriber.
Responsible Organization - R/O
- With 800 Portability,the Number Administration
Service Center (NASC) allows the RespOrg to make changes such as carrier,
termination, 800 call routing (by time of day, location.) A Letter Of
Agency (LOA) must be on file to change the RespOrg for each customer/account.
Slam
- An end user that is PICed without their
permission. An RBOC Slam Fee must be paid for each slam.
SMS - Service Management System
-
- SMS Customer Record
- All information related to one 800 number,
effective date and time, etc.
Speed Dialing
- A service to abbreviate and accelerate
frequently dialed numbers.
State Tax
- A collection of tax types that each state
is allowed to charge. Tax jurisdiction (which state can charge tax for
a call) is based on the two-out-of-three rule: where it originates,
where it terminates, where it is being billed to - if two match, that
state can charge the tax.
Surcharge
- An additional charge on top of a base
rate for a specified reason.
Switch
- A device (like a DMS-250 or a PBX) that
responds to originator signals and dynamically connects the caller to
the desired communication destination.
Switched Access
- Nondedicated local access between the
customer's premise and the serving wire center which is interconnected
to the company's point-of-presence for origination or termination of
service.
- Switched Access Service
- A class of LEC services that provides
the link from the customer's premise to the IEC PoP for switched circuits.
Switched Resellers
- Resellers that utilize their own switching
hardware (and sometimes their own lines) and the lines of other IXCs
to provide long-distance service to its subscribers. They provide their
own billing and service.
Switched Services
- All dial up long-distance services including
conventional residential and WATS (most have incremental use charges).
(See Message Toll Service)
Switching Fee
- A per-line fee (usually around 5$) imposed
by the LEC to reprogram their switching system to change your default
carrier. Subscribers must usually pay this fee when switching to a reseller.
Some resellers will reimburse the subscribers for this fee.
Switchless Reseller
- A reseller of long-distance services that
does not utilize any of its own lines, or (switching) equipment. All
actual service and equipment is handled by the IXC. Billing is usually
done, by the reseller themselves, to the customer.
T1/DS-1
- (Facility) The equivalent of 24 multiplexed
voice grade channels. 1.544 million bits per second (1.5Mbps)
T2/DS-2
- (Facility) The equivalent of 4 multiplexed
T1 channels. 6.312 million bits per second (6.3Mbps)
T3/DS-3
- (Facility) The equivalent of 28 multiplexed
T1 channels. 44.736 million bits per second (45Mbps)
T4/DS-4
- (Facility) The equivalent of 6 multiplexed
T3 channels. 274.176 million bits per second (274Mbps)
Tariff
- A public document filed with the FCC or
a PUC that outlines services and rates. Usually, all customers are offered
the same rate for a specific service, based on published constraints.
- TDD - Telecommunications
Device for the Deaf
- Telco - Telephone Company
- The local or regional telephone company
that owns and operates lines to customer locations and Class 5 Central
Office Switches. Telcos have connections to other COs, Tandem (Class
4 Toll) offices and may connect directly to IECs like WorldCom, AT&T,
MCI, Sprint, LDDS, etc.
Third Party Billing
- Use of an outside service bureau for bill
processing such as: call rating, customer invoicing, collections, etc.
- Time of Day Routing
- Route calls based on the time the call
originates. (e.g. direct morning calls to East Coast operators and afternoon
calls to West Coast operators, etc.). SMS/800 supports 15 minute time
intervals.
Toll
- A rated call (Contrast CDR - unrated call
detail record). Tolls appear on the Invoice Detail.
Toll Call
- A call with incremental use (minute-by-minute)
charges. (Often through a Class 4 Toll Office).
Toll Fraud
- A crime in which a "hacker"
obtains telecommunication services by: breaching computer security,
using or selling stolen long-distance credit-card codes, or, accessing
a PBX and using its communication facilities illegally. Toll Fraud is
estimated to cost U.S. companies $1.2 billion/year.
Two Out Of Three Rule
- When determining state tax jurisdiction,
there are three locations to consider: originating station, destination
station, and the location that the bill is sent to. If two out of three
are the same, then that state receives the tax.
USF
- Universal Service Fund Charge or Universal
Service Charge, Carrier Universal Service Charge, Federal Universal
Service Fund Surcharge
Vanity Number
- A specific 800 or 888 number (may spell
something).
Verified Account Codes
- See Account Codes. A finite list of carrier-verified,
predefined Account Codes.
Voice Mail
- An automatic answering service with the
ability to record a message. Unlike simple answering machines, Voice
mail uses a programmable computer system with options such as temporary
call routing, monitoring and reporting, etc.
Voice Mail Box
- The assignment of one user/number on a
voice mail system.
WATS - Wide Area Telephone Service
- Flat rate, or special rate pay-by-the-minute
(measured) billing for a specified calling area. May be outbound or
inbound (e.g. 800).
Wireless
- Radio waves, cellular, satellite, microwave,
etc.
WTN - Working Telephone Number
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